CS68 .B46
Ms. Bentley’s compilation is a direct transcription of the original
microfilmed lists (NARS M237) for the port of New York, 1820-1832. The name
of the passenger is given with gender, occupation, origin, and date of
arrival. The book also contains a separate list of the ships with the port
of embarkation.

CS68 .C35 1983
Cassady’s publication makes available for the first time over 10,200 names
of people arriving in the U.S. Names are listed in the order they are given
on the original list. Each entry provides the name of the passenger, age,
gender, occupation, last place of residence, and destination. Indexed.

CS61 .C62
Coldham provides a brief history of transportation in vol. 1 along with a
list of the ships carrying convicts from London, Middlesex and Home counties
between 1716-1775. The next eight volumes contain lists of names of convicts
who were shipped from Middlesex, London, Home counties, Western Circuit,
Oxford Circuit, Norfolk Circuit, Northern Circuit and Midland Circuit.

CS49.C62 1988
These registers cover are the largest body of indenture records known. A
total of 10,000 servants, almost all from the West Country, the West
Midlands, or from Wales, are a unique record of English emigration to the
American colonies. The entries give the name, destination, name of the
master, and the name of the ship after 1670. Indexed.

F332.M6 C66 1988
These lists of passengers who entered the port of Mobile between 1838 – 1860
contain varying information. Some lists give the name of the passenger, age,
gender, their place of residence and their native home. Many of the lists
provide the persons’ occupation and some give the names of the "coloured"
passengers. Indexed.

E184.S3 D63
The information found in Dobson’s books is based on documents found in the
British Archives, some published sources, various government serial
publications, contemporary newspapers, periodicals articles, church records,
probate records, state records, and books. The immigrants went to Canada,
the West Indies, and America. Entries provide the name of the immigrant,
age, occupation, date and place of arrival, and sometimes a place of birth.

E184 .G3 G38
Glazier and Filby plan to cover the 19th century with this
publication. Each book is arranged chronologically by each ships’ date of
arrival. Names are transcribed from the original manifest schedules
(passenger lists). Each entry gives the name of the immigrant, age, gender,
port of departure, port and date of arrival, and occupation if know.
Indexed. Use with care as many errors have been found.

F123 .I53 1958 Microfilm
The microfilmed card index lists the names of the passengers, age, gender,
marital status, occupation, nationality, destination, name of vessel, port
of arrival, and date of arrival. It is important to remember that Ellis
Island did not process people until 1892. There is web site that is
searchable by surname for those whose ancestors came through Ellis Island.http://www.ellisislandrecords.org/

E184 .I8 I844
Italians to America is the first indexed reference work devoted to the large
Italian immigration to the U.S. at the end of the 19th century.
The information is arranged chronologically by the ship’s arrival date. Each
entry gives the name of the immigrant, age, gender, occupation, village of
origin (when known), destination, name of ship, port of embarkation, and
date of arrival in the U.S.

E184 .R9 M54
This work will cover the years 1875-1910 when over 2.3 million Russian
immigrants arrived in the U.S. Information that can be found in these
volumes: name of the immigrant, age, gender, occupation, country of origin,
place of residence, and destination.

CS68 .N48
These volumes are an effort to consolidate the articles cited in Harold
Lancour’s
Bibliography of Ship Passenger Lists, 1538-1825. Not every article
cited by Lancour is contained within these books however many of them are
reprinted here. This work will be of great assistance to many researchers as
it provides so much information in two books.

CS68 .P377
These volumes are alphabetical surname indexes to various sources that list
immigrants to the U.S. There is a code listed after the name that indicates
the source indexed. This index is also available on CD and online at
Ancestry.

F374 .P37 1958 Microfilm
Arranged by arrival date, each vessel’s list includes port of debarkation
with name, age, sex, occupation, and native country of all passengers. Use
the
Index to Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving in New Orleans before 1900
(F374.R43 1957) to obtain the date of entry then go to the passenger lists
to find the entry for this set of microfilm.

F106 .S87 1960 Microfilm
This microfilm publication indexes the passenger lists included under the
alphabetical listing of ports contained in M575 at miscellaneous ports on
the Atlantic and Gulf Coast 1820-1873. Each reel contains various ports with
varying years, i.e., Alexandria, Virginia covers 1820-1865 while Charleston,
South Carolina covers 1820-1828 and Mobile, Alabama is 1832-1852.

E184.D9 S95 1983
Dr. Swierenga has compiled a coded computer listing of all Dutch nationals
arriving in the U.S. between 1820 – 1880. The list is arranged
alphabetically by surname. These volumes provide the following information:
martial status, age, gender, occupation, and destination, country of origin,
ship name, and U.S. port of arrival. This is an invaluable tool for
researchers as the passenger lists are not indexed so locating a person
would be almost impossible.

CS68 .T464 1986
The oldest passenger list in existence. Lists names of passengers, many
times their age, nationality, former place of residence, occupation, and
destination and the names and relationships of accompanying family members.
Most of the passengers were from Great Britain (especially Northern Ireland)
and Germany. The names are arranged in a single alphabetical list.

http://www.immigrantships.net/
The Immigrant Ship Transcribers Guild has done a lot of work. Their work is not
to be linked or duplicated without their permission. It is a searchable database
and contains many lists.